Microbes & Pathogen Biology, The Institute for Global Food Security, School of Biological Sciences, Queen's University Belfast, Belfast, United Kingdom.
Department of Animal, Plant and Soil Sciences, and Centre for AgriBioscience, La Trobe University, Bundoora, Australia.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2016 Sep 13;10(9):e0004994. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0004994. eCollection 2016 Sep.
Fascioliasis (or fasciolosis) is a socioeconomically important parasitic disease caused by liver flukes of the genus Fasciola. Flukicide resistance has exposed the need for new drugs and/or a vaccine for liver fluke control. A rapidly improving 'molecular toolbox' for liver fluke encompasses quality genomic/transcriptomic datasets and an RNA interference platform that facilitates functional genomics approaches to drug/vaccine target validation. The exploitation of these resources is undermined by the absence of effective culture/maintenance systems that would support in vitro studies on juvenile fluke development/biology. Here we report markedly improved in vitro maintenance methods for Fasciola hepatica that achieved 65% survival of juvenile fluke after 6 months in standard cell culture medium supplemented with 50% chicken serum. We discovered that this long-term maintenance was dependent upon fluke growth, which was supported by increased proliferation of cells resembling the "neoblast" stem cells described in other flatworms. Growth led to dramatic morphological changes in juveniles, including the development of the digestive tract, reproductive organs and the tegument, towards more adult-like forms. The inhibition of DNA synthesis prevented neoblast-like cell proliferation and inhibited growth/development. Supporting our assertion that we have triggered the development of juveniles towards adult-like fluke, mass spectrometric analyses showed that growing fluke have an excretory/secretory protein profile that is distinct from that of newly-excysted juveniles and more closely resembles that of ex vivo immature and adult fluke. Further, in vitro maintained fluke displayed a transition in their movement from the probing behaviour associated with migrating stage worms to a slower wave-like motility seen in adults. Our ability to stimulate neoblast-like cell proliferation and growth in F. hepatica underpins the first simple platform for their long-term in vitro study, complementing the recent expansion in liver fluke resources and facilitating in vitro target validation studies of the developmental biology of liver fluke.
片形吸虫病(或片形吸虫病)是一种由片形科片形属肝吸虫引起的具有重要社会经济意义的寄生虫病。杀肝吸虫剂耐药性暴露了对肝吸虫控制的新药物和/或疫苗的需求。肝吸虫的快速改进的“分子工具箱”包括高质量的基因组/转录组数据集和 RNA 干扰平台,该平台促进了药物/疫苗靶标验证的功能基因组学方法。这些资源的利用受到缺乏有效的培养/维持系统的阻碍,该系统将支持对幼体吸虫发育/生物学的体外研究。在这里,我们报告了明显改进的 Fasciola hepatica 体外维持方法,该方法在标准细胞培养基中添加 50%鸡血清,6 个月后幼体吸虫的存活率达到 65%。我们发现这种长期维持依赖于吸虫的生长,这得到了类似于其他扁形动物中描述的“neoblast”干细胞的细胞增殖的支持。生长导致幼体发生明显的形态变化,包括消化道、生殖器官和体被的发育,向更类似成虫的形式发展。DNA 合成的抑制阻止了 neoblast 样细胞的增殖并抑制了生长/发育。支持我们的断言,即我们已经促使幼体向成虫样吸虫发育,质谱分析表明,生长的吸虫具有排泄/分泌蛋白谱,与刚孵出的幼体不同,更类似于体外未成熟和成虫吸虫。此外,体外维持的吸虫在其运动方式上发生了转变,从与迁移阶段蠕虫相关的探测行为转变为在成虫中观察到的较慢的波浪样运动。我们能够刺激 Fasciola hepatica 中的 neoblast 样细胞增殖和生长,为其长期体外研究提供了第一个简单的平台,补充了肝吸虫资源的最新扩展,并促进了肝吸虫发育生物学的体外靶标验证研究。